There's no definitive evidence that Tylenol causes autism, and multiple medical groups have reiterated that it remains safe ...
Despite the advertised focus on acetaminophen, Trump repeatedly brought up vaccines during his big autism announcement ...
Health organizations from around the globe are joining the chorus of experts rejecting the Trump administration's claim that ...
The dean of the Brown University School of Public Health says HHS Secretary RFK Jr. has made conversations about autism more ...
President Donald Trump and Robert F. Kennedy Jr. publicly advanced unfounded theories tying autism to acetaminophen. Public ...
President Donald Trump, alongside his Secretary of Health and Human Services Robert F. Kennedy Jr., made a major announcement ...
Helen Tager-Flusberg, PhD, director of the Center for Autism Research Excellence at Boston University, called Trump's ...
President Donald Trump warned U.S. women to stop taking Tylenol in pregnancy or risk giving their children autism. The advice came with no clear scientific basis during an hourlong press conference as ...
The White House's autism announcement exaggerates links to Tylenol, misleads on vaccines, and sets back the field by ignoring decades of research, scientists say.
President Trump and his health secretary RFK Jr. held a news conference Sept. 22 claiming Tylenol was linked to autism, what to know.
The president and the health secretary said the painkiller increases the risk of autism, but the research is unclear and doctors are pushing back.
RFK Jr. says he wants to study the causes of rising autism rates, but experts say he is ignoring the scientific evidence to ...